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እንካ óን ደኅና መጣችሁ፡፡

እንካ óን ደኅና መጣችሁ፡፡. Welcome. Technical Vocational Education And Training. Summary Report Anbesu Biazen January 2009 Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. TVET Mapping Summary Report. Education Foundation January 24, 2009. Map of Ethiopia. Contents of the Presentation. Background study

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እንካ óን ደኅና መጣችሁ፡፡

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  1. እንካóን ደኅና መጣችሁ፡፡ Welcome

  2. Technical Vocational Education And Training • Summary Report • Anbesu Biazen • January 2009 • Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

  3. TVET Mapping Summary Report Education Foundation January 24, 2009

  4. Map of Ethiopia

  5. Contents of the Presentation • Background study • Formal and non Formal TVET sector in Ethiopia • Labor market in Ethiopia • Lessons learnt from previous interventions/ approaches, good practices • Practical and policy challenges • SWOT • Opportunities for the future for improved harmonization of different actors • Way forward

  6. Introduction • With introduction of ETP, TVET has become been paid serious attention. • The number of formal TVE centers has increased from 17 to 380 • However, there is very little documented information showing efforts made to link TVET training with labor market. • The present desk work is an attempt to cover the art of review of the status of formal and non-formal technical and vocational education and training and the labor market in the country • The study is initiated by Educans foundation

  7. Rationale for the mapping • The importance of the mapping exercise lies in the establishment of future relevant partnership and design activities to improve TVET provisions. • The mapping will function as a guide for TVET further development and strengthening partnership.

  8. Objectives • The overall objective of this study is to describe the policy environment and the current situation regarding demand and supply of TVET, • Identify the performances, problems, strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats, lessons learned and options for (coordinated) support for the TVET sector in Ethiopia.

  9. Methodology • Reviewing the available documents • Discussions with key informants

  10. Reporting mechanism Composition of the study team: • Ato Anbesu Biazen • Ato Amha Aligaz

  11. The context • Population: 79,221,000 (50.1 % males and 49.9 % females). • Population growth rate: 2.7% A major concern for planners, development workers and the government at large. • About 17 % of the total population lives in urban settings and 83 % in rural areas. • About 50 % of the population is between the ages of 15 and 54 and 4 % of the population is over the age of 60.

  12. Continued … • 90% of the poor live in rural areas, most of them exclusively engaged in agriculture. • Around 35 million people of the Ethiopian work force are characterized by low skill levels and very low average educational attainment. • Only 10% of the urban population has post-secondary school education. 75% of the workforce is concentrated in low skill employment • Less than half of the urban workforce is engaged in wage employment. A significant portion of the urban workforce works for unpaid family business. • More than 40% are self-employed in the informal economy, most of which live on the edge of poverty. • In urban areas, about 26% of the workforce is officially unemployed

  13. TVET Strategy indicates that: • Over 31 million people live below the defined poverty line of 45 US cents per day and millions of people are at risk of starvation every year (TVET Strategy 2006). • The PASDEP estimates that the country has to raise its average economic growth rate to 8% annually in order to achieve the MDG. • The Ethiopian work force of around 35 million people. • Capacity building is thought the way out from the problem of poverty.

  14. Facts and figures on the formal TVET Program • It provides training for those who competed their tenth-grade education. • The students obtain certificate, diploma and advanced diploma upon completion of 10+1, 10+2 or 10+3 of the TVET program. • The number of TVET centers has grown from 17 to 388, and enrolment from 3,000 to 191,151. • Over 30% of the students were enrolled in non-government TVET institutions. • Around 60% of formal TVET is provided in the form of regular programmes and 40% in evening classes

  15. Continued … • The annual average increase was 28.1%. • The Ministry of Agriculture runs 25 of the 388 TVET centers. • In 2004/05, 42,000 trainees were enrolled in agriculture TVET programmes • Some 10,000 in teacher training institutes and colleges.

  16. Gender Disparity • It is considerably high. Only 43% of the total enrolment consisted of female students. • The girls are limited to traditional female stereotype roles. They need to equally participate in all vocational areas including the prestigious ones.

  17. TEVET Curriculum • Twenty broad vocational areas have been identified for the TVET program by the MOE. • Over 163 trades have also been identified under the twenty vocations. • Currently the formal TVET institutions are providing about 39 trades in regular, evening and distance learning. • The trades provided in the regions ranges from 6-39 in regular classes, 5-18 in evening classes and 2-11 in distance learning in government institutions.

  18. Curriculum development • It was centralized at the beginning. • The vocational areas and the specific trades • Training materials development is now left for training institutions. • MOE develops occupational standards with the involvement of stakeholders. • The MoE supports other Ministries and organizations in the development of occupational standards.

  19. Challenges in curriculum development • Introducing changes in the curriculum with in a short period of time. • Instructors lack competency for developing training materials based on the occupational standards.

  20. Training • In principle trainees have opportunities for career development. • Apprenticeship is not sufficiently exercised. • In most cases trainees have little choice in the selection of trades. • Trainers are said to be old timers. • They have been given short term trainings of trainers. • Trainers are criticized for lacking practical skills.

  21. Facilities and equipment • Government formal TVET training institutions are well equipped and furnished.

  22. Employment opportunities • The employment opportunity is said to be low. • Experts feel that there is plenty of opportunity for self employment. • Labor market assesments and tracer studies are lacking.

  23. The Non-formal TVET • The government, NGOs and the private sector have been running different training programs. • NFTVET has been provided with the purpose of building the capacity of the workforce and alleviating poverty by providing skill trainings for the poor and improving their livelihood. • The scale at which training has been given was so small that it has not made substantive change on the life of the majority of the poor • Trades given in NFTVET centres include woodwork, metalwork, tailoring, embroidery, weaving, typing, computer training, driving, etc. • These trades have been given in institutions like Community Skill Training Centres (CSTC), prisons and other government institutions.

  24. NF-TVET definition • NF–TVET means training based on well-defined curricula, either within or without an institution, with or without guidance from a teacher or trainer.

  25. Continued … • This includes: • Training over different periods of time – from short-term courses of a few days to long-term programs of up to 6 months, • Training through different modalities: (institutional, community based, mobile, link and apprenticeship) • Life skills or add-on components for ABE / Primary Educations • Training for a wide range of target groups: • Unemployed, youth and adults, • School dropouts and those with grade 8 - education or lower including illiterate people, • People potential /active in the informal economic sector, • People from urban and rural areas, • Landless poor, and • Disadvantaged groups • People with disabilities

  26. The recent Non- Formal TVET mapping survey report showed that Non- formal TVET is provided in over 400 government, Private, community and non-governmental organizations. • The number would have been larger were the FTC included.

  27. Profile of training Providers: • Of the known different modalities of training i.e. institutional, community based, mobile, link and apprentice, the mobile modality is observed only in one case. • The Save the Children UK is the sole provider of mobile training to the rural people on woodwork, tailoring, weaving and embroidery. • Although it is known that apprenticeship is being exercised almost in all vocations, there is very little documentation on how it works, how many are trained and what the benefits are in terms of self-employment and improving the livelihood of trainees.

  28. Objectives of the training institutions: • To provide training that will enable poor youth and adults engage in self-employment with the ultimate goal of improved livelihood of trainees. • Disabled persons, people with HIV/AIDS and poor women are among those who are given training opportunities\by NGOs and CBOs.

  29. Types of trades provided • The types of trainings provided in Ethiopia are very few (only 26 types) in number. • The major types of trainings provided in government institutions are basic metal work, tailoring, knitting and embroidery. • Leather craft, heavy machine operation, metal work, secretarial science and photographing, and private institutions provide training on wood work, embroidery, hair dressing, food preparation leather work, car décor, massage, driving, basic computer skills, computer maintenance, and beauty skills training are provided by the private organizations and NGOs.

  30. Availability of training manuals • Most adapt materials made available by the MOE. • There are short comings like formal TVET centers.

  31. Market assessment and training needs • All the government, NGO and private training institutions claim that what they have provided so far is need based training.

  32. Trade preference of trainees: • Government trainees don’t have trade preference. • The situation is quite different in private and NGO institutions

  33. Equipment • Government institutions are known for using too old equipment that has been used for decades. • NGOs and the private organizations are better of

  34. Unit cost: • The available data didn’t enable to calculate unit cost.

  35. Enrollment • There is no documented statistical data on enrolment, drop out and retention on NF-TVET institutions at Federal, Regional as well as institutional level.

  36. Informal TVET training: • Informal (on-the-job) training is widespread • No study made.

  37. Policies: • The PASDEP’s • The TVET revised strategy • The Industrial Development Strategy of 2003 • The Poverty Reduction Strategy • ETP • All these policies emphasize the need for the Provision of TVET for poverty alleviation, livelihood improvement, economic development, reducing unemployment

  38. Education Sector Plan • (ESDP III outlines a comprehensive development vision for the TVET sector. • ESDP III has allocated a total of 3,000 million ETB to TVET over a five-year period. Increasing enrolment and improving facilities are targeted.

  39. Main Actors The most important actors identified by the MOE include: • Employers, both private and public • The business sector • Representatives from the MSE sectors • Workers and employees represented by trade unions and professional associations • Public and private TVET providers • Civil society and NGOs • People living and working in rural areas by relevant associations • Teachers and instructors in the TVET system • Trainees and their families.

  40. Key donors • GTZ is the major donor in providing technical and financial assistance • The Chinese government also provides technical and other forms of assistance for the formal TVET program. • The government of Ireland has also been assisting the TVET program financially. • UNESCO has shown some interest to support the TVET in terms of curriculum development • IIZ/DVV has also been supporting the Non-Formal TVET program. IIZ/DVV has also been supporting the Non-Formal TVET program.

  41. Demand and supply • The Available formal TVET institutions provide training only for less than 3% of the appropriate age group. • Youth unemployment in urban areas is considerably high

  42. Issues: • development of training materials • Trainers in-competency • Facilities and equipments are needed for diversified trades • Demand for TVET training • Unemployment • Budget limitation and limited NGO support

  43. Labour market in Ethiopia • The assessment addresses the points outlined in the TOR • Time limitation hasn’t enable to go through each point deeply

  44. Facts and Figures • Population: estimated at 79,221,000 (50.1 % male and 49.9 % female). • About 17 % live in urban and the remaining 83 % in rural. • About 50 % of the population is between the ages of 15 and 54 and 4 % of the population is over the age of 60.

  45. Continued … • Economy has a dual nature: traditional small holding subsistence agriculture and the modern sector which consists of public employment, manufacturing and service sectors. • Agricultural sector economic activities are dominated by subsistence crop and livestock productions. Exportable agricultural commodities including sesame, coffee, cotton, vegetable and spices are also cultivated in many parts of the country. • the agricultural sector contributed 45 % to GDP and accounted for 80 percent of all exports, mainly coffee, oilseeds and processed and semi-processed hides and skins.

  46. Continued … • Modern economic activity is concentrated in urban areas. • textile, beverage and food processing, construction, quarrying and service sector. • In 2006/2007, manufacturing, mining, trade, tourism, construction, services and others made up 55 percent of GDP. • Over 36 percent of the urban population lives below absolute poverty line and urban unemployment rate is estimated at 16 percent

  47. Continued … • Unemployment is the highest in the age group 15 – 19 years and age group 20-24. • About 80 percent of employed youth work in the informal sector, many of whom are unpaid family workers. • Unemployment rate for women is higher than men both in urban and rural areas. • Government or public sector employment accounts for 18 %. • Private business employment accounts for about 15.7 % of the total formal sector employment • Informalsector contribution to the GNP was estimated up to 40 % and its share of total employment 70%

  48. Formal/Informal Economy and Employment • The labour market is highly segmented between the informal and formal sector employment. • Informal sector economy and employment is household establishments not officially registered as business and do not have business licenses or fixed place of business. • Informal sector employment comprises the self employed mechanics, domestic workers, real estate and other financial intermediaries, daily labor, small food and beverage, clothing enterprises, street vendors of all types including neighborhood outdoor food markets, small scale bar and restaurant services and seasonal farm labor.

  49. Continued … • The formal sector urban employment and economic activities are comprised of self employment, public sector employment and private business employment.

  50. Employment and Unemployment • Rural • Urban

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